"There are many doctors who are concerned about the long hours that they work, especially if they've been on call and having to attend to patients the next day both at the hospital and in their clinics, so this is an area where many rural doctors are facing the challenges of their professional lives as well as their private lives, quite a challenge," he said.

"There are some important issues that have not been addressed in this current agreement. We need to work with the Government to work out a system of how to support those doctors providing those emergency and on-call services as well as supporting them in their practices and looking at the infrastructure supports that are necessary for increased teaching and training in rural areas."

Kangaroo Island MP Michael Pengilly says the Australian Competition and Consumer and Commission (ACCC) has dropped an investigation into alleged collusion by six doctors on the island.

Mr Pengilly says he was appalled by the allegations levelled against the doctors.

"The ACCC dropped that allegation of collusion. I think it is absolutely disgraceful that local doctors working in an isolated community, geographically separated from the mainland, were accused of collusion," he said.

"I think it is entirely improper and terribly wrong."

The ACCC says it does not comment on investigations or their completion.

Since the airing of the gut-wrenching documentary Leaving Neverland, many of us have wrestled with an uncomfortable, yet essential question: given everything we know, can we continue listening to Michael Jackson's music?